SUMMARY: The Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Act of 2000
(“Act”), Public Law 106-398, establishes a program to provide compensation to individuals
who developed illnesses as a result of their employment in nuclear weapons production-related
activities and certain other federally-owned facilities in which radioactive materials
were used. On December 7, 2000, the President issued Executive Order 13179 (“Order”)
directing the Department of Energy (“Department” or “DOE”) to list covered facilities in the
Federal Register. This notice responds to both the Act and the Order.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Office of Worker Advocacy, 1-877-447-9756.

ADDRESSES: The Department welcomes comments on this list. Individuals who wish to
suggest additional facilities for inclusion on the list, indicate why one or more facilities should
be removed from the list, or provide other information may contact:

The Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Act of 2000 (“Act”),
Public Law 106-398, establishes a program to provide compensation to individuals who
developed illnesses as a result of their employment in nuclear weapons production-related
activities and certain other federally-owned facilities in which radioactive materials were used.
On December 7, 2000, the President issued Executive Order 13179 (“Order”) directing the
Department of Energy (“Department” or “DOE”) to list covered facilities in the Federal
Register. Section 2. c. vii of the Order instructs the Department to list three types of facilities:

1) Atomic weapons employer facilities, as defined in section 3621 (4) of the Act;
2) Department of Energy facilities, as defined by section 3621 (12) of the Act; and
3) Beryllium vendors, as defined by section 3621 (6) of the Act.

Compensation options and mechanisms are defined differently for each of these facility
categories defined within the Act.

The following list represents the Department’s best efforts to date to compile a list of
facilities in these three categories. Reconstructing the operational history of the nuclear
weapons system over a sixty-year period is a complex and sometimes imprecise undertaking.
Some list entries are based on records that contain the names and addresses of companies and
facilities at the time work was performed for the Department and its predecessor federal
agencies. The list may identify a corporate headquarters facility as a production location, or
may contain some inadvertent duplication because of changes in names, ownership, and
addresses. Similarly, attempts to minimize duplication may have resulted in the inadvertent
omission of subsidiaries and satellite locations that should be included. Accordingly, the
Department is continuing its research efforts in order to better understand past production
activities, and DOE intends to update this list at least once annually so long as new
information becomes available. The public is invited to comment on the list and provide
additional information.

In addition to continuing its research efforts, the Department is developing information
dissemination mechanisms to make facility-specific data available to the public, including a
publicly accessible database of site-related information. This database will help ensure that
the Department keeps track of facilities involved in atomic weapons and other work
potentially resulting in contamination or exposure. The site database will include, among
other information, the type of nuclear weapons-related production work done, the dates such
work occurred, and available health and safety data concerning the facility. The listing of
facility name and location in this notice represents only a first step in providing information to
the public.

The Act does not cover workers involved in uranium mining and milling, or those who
worked in support of naval nuclear propulsion programs. Consequently, facilities associated
with this type of work are not listed in this notice. Some workers who became ill as a result of
their employment at these facilities may be covered by other programs such as the Radiation
Exposure Compensation Act (RECA), the Federal Exposure Compensation Act (FECA), or
other jurisdictions’ worker compensation programs.

Introduction to the Covered Facility List

The list that follows represents the three categories of employers defined by the Act:
atomic weapons employers (“AWE”), Department of Energy facilities (“DOE”), and beryllium
vendors (“BE”). Some facilities fall into more than one category. For example, if a private
contractor facility handled both radioactive materials and beryllium, it will have “AWE” and
“BE” in the “facility type” field. For another example, a facility will have both “DOE” and
“AWE” codes if ownership changed between the DOE and another entity. The Department
intends to provide facility-specific explanations of the applicability of these categories through
the database mentioned above.

(A) processed or produced, for the use by the United States, material that emitted
radiation and was used in the production of an atomic weapon, excluding uranium mining and
milling; and

(B) is designated as an atomic weapons employer for purposes of this title by the
Secretary of Energy."

Most facilities listed as an AWE conducted nuclear weapons-related work for a limited
period of time or in certain select areas of the plant. For example, some sites worked with
radioactive materials to evaluate processing machinery that was being considered for use in
atomic weapons production. Radioactive materials may not have been used as a routine part
of the facility’s operations. The Act covers those workers who became sick as a consequence
of their work in support of nuclear weapons production activities, and was not intended to
cover all workers at each site named.

The lines between research, atomic weapons production, and non-weapons production
are often difficult to draw. For the purposes of this notice, and as directed by the Act, only
those facilities whose work involved radioactive material that was connected to the weapons
production chain are included. Available information about many of these firms is incomplete
or unclear, and the Department welcomes comments or additional information regarding
facilities that may have supported atomic weapons production that are not on this list, as well
as information that clarifies the work done at facilities named below.

2. Department of Energy Facilities

Section 3621 (12) of the Act defines a Department of Energy facility as "any building,
structure, or premise, including the grounds upon which such building, structure, or premise is
located--

(A) in which operations are, or have been, conducted by, or on behalf of, the
Department of Energy (except for buildings, structures, premises, grounds, or operations
covered by Executive Order 12344, pertaining to the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program); and

(B) with regard to which the Department of Energy has or had--

(i) a proprietary interest; or

(ii) entered into a contract with an entity to provide management and operation,
management and integration, environmental remediation services, construction, or
maintenance services."

Consistent with this definition, the Department has taken a broad view of where
operations have been conducted by DOE or its predecessor agencies. The following list
includes any facility handling radioactive materials or beryllium in which the Department had
management and operations, management and integration, environmental remediation, or
construction and maintenance contracts. This broad definition includes many facilities which
are not generally thought of as Departmental facilities, as well as facilities which are not
necessarily involved with weapons-related work. For example, some universities and private
companies are included because the Department contracted for environmental remediation
services at these sites, even though the Department did not own the facility. Also, some DOE-owned
laboratories are included because they do work involving radioactive materials, even
though that work is not related to nuclear weapons production.

The Act covers production workers at the Gaseous Diffusion Plants at Paducah, KY
and Piketon, OH. Production workers at these facilities are covered for work conducted until
July 28, 1998, when the facilities were privatized under the control of the United States
Enrichment Corporation (USEC, Inc.)

The listing of Department of Energy facilities is only intended for the context of
implementing this Act and does not create or imply any new Departmental obligations or
ownership at any of the facilities named on this list.

(I) Any other vendor, processor, or producer of beryllium or related products
designated as a beryllium vendor for purposes of this title under Section 3622."

Beryllium metal has been an important material for atomic weapons production, and it
was used at many places throughout the production system. The following list indicates
private firms that processed, produced, or provided beryllium metal for the Department, as
defined by the Act. This information is drawn from a variety of historical documents, and
much data remains incomplete. The Department welcomes comments or additional
information about its beryllium vendors.